Riverglen, Los Angeles Real Estate & Neighborhood Guide 2026

Riverglen, Los Angeles: Complete Homebuyer & Realtor Guide 2026

Excellent transit hub with walkable dining, entertainment, and urban convenience near Santa Ana

Riverglen offers transit-rich urban living with walkable neighborhoods and strong connectivity, but limited local schools mean families often need private options or transfers.
$905K
Median Sale Price
Los Angeles County Redfin February 2026
32 days
Days on Market
Redfin LA County 2026
60/100
Walk Score
Proximitii Walkability 6/10
90/100
Transit Score
Proximitii Transit 9/10

About Riverglen, Los Angeles

Riverglen, Los Angeles, California is an emerging urban neighborhood positioned in Orange County's northern corridor, strategically located near Santa Ana and the convergence of major transit arteries. Bounded by major thoroughfares and proximate to The City Drive corridor and Bristol Street, Riverglen benefits from excellent Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA) connectivity—with Bristol-Riverglen and Bristol-Hesperian transit stops just 2–3 minutes away on foot. This proximity-based neighborhood has developed into a walkable community with strong restaurant density and entertainment options, making it particularly attractive to professionals seeking urban convenience without premium central-LA pricing.

Riverglen residents are primarily young professionals, commuters, and transit-dependent households who value connectivity over suburban amenities. What draws buyers here is the rare combination of excellent public transit access (9/10 Proximitii score) with a 6/10 walkability rating that provides good access to neighborhood dining—including popular spots like Pulido's Mexican Food & Burger (365m away) and Juan Pollo (397m away)—plus proximity to major employment centers via transit. The neighborhood's strength lies in its role as a practical, cost-effective base for workers commuting across Orange County and into Los Angeles, paired with genuine walkable-block dining and entertainment options nearby at the City Boulevard entertainment district.

Excellent public transit connectivity via OCTA Bristol-Riverglen stops Walkable neighborhood dining and casual restaurants within 6–10 minute walks Proximity to City Boulevard entertainment district (shopping, dining, movies) Affordable urban living compared to central Los Angeles neighborhoods Strong commute access to Orange County employment centers and LA via transit
Transit-focused Urban walkable Mixed-income Commuter-friendly Dining-casual Affordable urban Practical Car-optional
ZIP Code: 92805  ·  Boundaries: Riverglen is bounded by Memory Lane to the north, Hesperian Road and local residential streets to the south, Bristol Street (major north-south arterial) to the east, and West 17th Street and surrounding commercial districts to the west, positioned within the greater Santa Ana-Orange city limits of Northern Orange County.

Riverglen Real Estate Market 2026

$905,000
-1.4% YoY
Median Sale Price
32 days
Avg. Days on Market
1.76
Months of Supply
⚡ Moderate Competition  · 97.91% list-to-sale

Los Angeles County housing market in early 2026 is balanced in Riverglen's favor. With 32 days average time on market and homes selling at 97.91% of asking price, this is a buyer-advantaged market—far different from the seller's markets of 2021–2022. Offers with contingencies are increasingly accepted, and well-priced properties attract interest quickly, but bidding wars are less common than they were in previous cycles.

Typical Offer Scenario

In Riverglen, typical offers include financing contingencies and inspection periods; homes at or slightly below asking price often close with minimal negotiation. With 1.76 months of supply countywide, there's enough inventory to allow selective offers, though desirable properties near transit stops (like those near Bristol-Riverglen) can see 1–2 competing offers and minor multiple-offer premiums.

Los Angeles County median prices declined 1.4% year-over-year (February 2026 vs. February 2025), reflecting market stabilization after the rapid appreciation of 2021–2024. Riverglen's positioning near transit and affordable urban living makes it relatively insulated from price declines—it's attracting buyers priced out of central LA, moderating downward pressure.

Source: Redfin Los Angeles County, February 2026; California Association of Realtors

Is Riverglen Right for You?

Riverglen, Los Angeles suits different buyers in different ways. Here’s who thrives here — and who should consider alternatives.

9
Commuting Professionals / Transit-Dependent Workers
Excellent Fit

Riverglen's defining feature is its 9/10 transit access score and proximity to Bristol-Riverglen OCTA stops (just 104–131m away, 2-minute walk). This makes it ideal for professionals working across Orange County—Santa Ana, Irvine, Long Beach—or those commuting north to Los Angeles via regional transit. The neighborhood offers affordable urban living ($905K median) compared to central LA while providing the connectivity that makes car-optional lifestyle feasible.

Limited walkability to grocery (2/10 score—nearest market is 28–30 minute walk). You'll need to drive or transit for most grocery needs. Also, school ratings are very low (4/10 education access), so this is not ideal if you have school-age children.

$850K–$1.3M typical budget
4
Young Families (Elementary & Pre-K)
Poor Fit

Riverglen has several elementary schools within walking distance: Santiago Elementary (1,199m), Riverdale Elementary (1,210m), and Lampson Elementary (1,486m). Some families appreciate that alternatives exist and that the neighborhood is affordable for families seeking to build equity before moving.

Schools here are problematic: Santiago Elementary scores only 33/100, with 26% proficiency in math and 40% in reading. Riverdale and Lampson are marginally better (42/100 and 35/100 respectively). Most affluent families will explore private schools or lottery-based magnet options. The education access score is just 4/10—among the neighborhood's weakest points. High school options are limited; Unity Middle College High (28 min walk) scores 50/100, while the best-rated option, Middle College High (31 min walk), has a strong 72/100 rating but is still a significant distance.

$950K–$1.4M typical budget
8
Entertainment & Dining Enthusiasts
Strong Fit

Riverglen's restaurant and entertainment score is exceptional (9/10). Within 6–10 minutes you'll find Pulido's Mexican Food & Burger (365m), Juan Pollo (397m), and BJ's Restaurant (605m). The nearby City Boulevard entertainment district (972m, 16-min walk) includes AMC Orange 30, Lucky Strike bowling, and retail/dining at Neiman Marcus and Saks Off 5th. This is genuinely walkable casual dining.

Coffee options are limited (4/10 score)—only Starbucks locations within reasonable range. Fine dining and upscale restaurants aren't nearby; most dining is casual to moderate. Nightlife culture is not strong; it's functional urban dining rather than a food/culture destination like Arts District LA or Silver Lake.

$800K–$1.2M typical budget
5
Downsizers & Retirees
Moderate Fit

Excellent walkability to dining (9/10) and transit (9/10) means downsizers can age in place without a car if desired. Parks and active-living options (6/10) include Memory Lane Park, Morrison Park, and nearby playgrounds. Emergency services are proximate: Orange Fire Station 6 (980m, 16-min walk), Sheriff's Dept (748m), and UCI Medical Center (1,207m, 19-min walk).

Fitness centers are scarce (2/10)—only Esporta Fitness (923m, 15-min walk) is practical. Orange and Santa Ana Senior Centers are 3+ km away. Healthcare walkability is moderate; while UCI Medical Center is accessible by transit, it's not a true neighborhood amenity. Grocery access (2/10) is a significant limitation for anyone without a car.

$750K–$1.1M typical budget

Types of Homes in Riverglen

Riverglen's housing stock reflects its mid-density urban character: a mix of multi-family rental buildings, some small single-family homes, and scattered condo/townhome communities. Most inventory in this transit-rich area is designed for renters or urban-focused buyers seeking smaller, efficient units rather than traditional suburban family homes.

Multi-Family Rental Buildings (6–24 units)

~50% of inventory · 600–1,100 per unit (2–3 bedroom) sqft

Strong capitalization in transit-rich location; steady tenant demand from commuters; appreciation upside from increasing density and transit investment

Tenant turnover; property management complexity; regulatory risk from local rent control

$1.2M–$4.5M (investment properties)

Condo / Townhome Community

~35% of listings · 1,100–1,800 sqft

Moderate pricing relative to LA; low maintenance; often include parking; walkable to transit stops

HOA fees (typically $250–400/month); less privacy; resale pool limited to condo buyers

$650K–$1.4M

Single-Family Home (small lot)

~15% of listings · 1,200–1,800 sqft

More space and privacy than condos; potential for value-add renovation; own yard

Smaller lots than suburban areas; older construction common; higher property taxes relative to value

$850K–$1.8M

How to Sell Riverglen to Your Clients

“Riverglen is a transit-rich, walkable urban neighborhood in Northern Orange County positioned as a savvy alternative for LA-commuting professionals and young families priced out of central LA. With Bristol-Riverglen OCTA stops just steps away, excellent restaurant walkability, and median prices $150K–$200K below central Los Angeles, it's an ideal pitch for buyers seeking urban convenience and connectivity at affordable pricing. The challenge: limited local schools and car-dependent grocery access mean you're positioning this for transit-dependent, non-family-with-kids, or private-school-committed buyers.”

Ideal client match: Primary target: Professionals aged 25–45 working in Orange County or LA who prioritize transit access and dining walkability over suburban schools and yards. Secondary target: Investment buyers seeking small multi-family buildings near transit with strong cap rates. Avoid pitching to: Families with elementary-school-age kids seeking traditional neighborhood schools; car-averse buyers without understanding transit needs; retirees without strong healthcare focus.

5 Talking Points

  • 1 Excellent OCTA transit connectivity: Bristol-Riverglen stops just 2 minutes on foot. This is the #1 differentiator. Residents can commute to Santa Ana, Irvine, and LA without a car.
  • 2 Restaurant walkability (9/10 Proximitii score): Pulido's, Juan Pollo, BJ's—all within 6–10 minute walk. City Boulevard entertainment district (16 min) adds AMC Orange 30, Lucky Strike, shopping. Rare for this price point.
  • 3 Median price $905K with 32 days on market (buyers' market): Offers with contingencies are accepted; no bidding wars on most properties. Strong negotiating position for buyers right now.
  • 4 Affordable urban alternative to central LA: Nearby neighborhoods in Santa Monica, Silver Lake, or Arts District start at $1.2M+. Riverglen offers similar urban walkability at 15–20% discount.
  • 5 Multi-family investment upside: Small apartment buildings (4–12 units) trading at 4.5–5.5% cap rates with strong tenant demand from transit-dependent workers. Appreciation potential as OCTA invests in corridor density.

Handling Common Objections

Aren't the schools really bad here? I'm worried about resale to families.
Yes, public school ratings are a legitimate concern (Santiago Elementary 33/100, Riverdale 42/100). But that's also why prices are lower than family-focused neighborhoods. Your buyers either don't have kids, are private-school committed, or understand they're buying for transit and lifestyle now and will trade up when kids hit school age. This isn't a forever home for most—it's a 5–7 year urban play. That's actually a feature for young professionals.
I don't see a grocery store anywhere nearby. That's a dealbreaker.
Fair point—Smart & Final is 28 minutes on foot, and it's not a full-service grocery. Most residents drive 5 min to Whole Foods or Ralphs in the area, or use delivery. If car-free living is essential, this isn't the right neighborhood. But for professionals who drive for shopping anyway, the transit advantage elsewhere (commute!) outweighs it.
Isn't this neighborhood a bit rundown? Why would I buy here instead of Santa Monica or West LA?
Riverglen isn't trendy like West LA, but that's the point. You're buying connectivity and walkability at 20% below the premium-neighborhood markup. Santa Monica median is $1.1M+; West LA is $1.3M+. Riverglen at $905K for similar walkability and better transit is smart arbitrage. You're not paying for coastal cachet—you're getting urban convenience.
Is this a gentrifying area, or is the market already peaked here?
Riverglen's growth is tied to OCTA transit investment and Orange County job center expansion (Irvine, Santa Ana corporate parks). It's not 'gentrifying' in the boho-coolness sense (no loft scene), but it is steadily appreciating as transit-oriented development density increases. Modest price declines (-1.4% YoY countywide) are market-wide, not Riverglen-specific. It's a 15–20 year hold for investors; a smart 5–7 year phase for young professionals.
🎯 Market Edge
In Riverglen's buyer's market (32 days on market, 97.91% sale-to-list ratio), your edge is speed and certainty: submit pre-approved offers with minimal contingencies on well-priced properties near Bristol-Riverglen transit stops, and negotiate for seller concessions or repairs rather than list-price premiums. Transit-proximate units move first; secondary streets lag. This is a 'check boxes quickly and negotiate on secondary terms' market, not an all-cash bidding war.

Living in Riverglen, Los Angeles

60 /100
Walk Score
Somewhat Walkable
Riverglen scores 6/10 on walkability (Proximitii), meaning a good mix of walkable dining and entertainment blocks near Memory Lane and Bristol, but car-dependency for groceries and some services. Daily life involves easy walks to restaurants (Pulido's, Juan Pollo, BJ's in 6–10 minutes) but car rides or longer walks for grocery shopping.
90 /100
Transit Score
Excellent Transit
OCTA Bristol-Riverglen Station (104m, 2-min walk), OCTA Bristol-Hesperian Station (213m, 3-min walk), OCTA Route 1, 42, 72 (major north-south connectivity)
50 /100
Bike Score
Bikeable (Secondary Streets)
🍽 Restaurants & Dining
  • Pulido's Mexican Food & Burger (365m, 6-min walk)
  • Juan Pollo (397m, 6-min walk)
  • BJ's Restaurant & Brewhouse (605m, 10-min walk)
  • City Boulevard restaurants & dining (972m, 16-min walk)

25+ restaurants · $ to $$

☕ Coffee Shops
  • Starbucks at City Boulevard West (771m, 12-min walk)
  • Kelly's Coffee (1,221m, 20-min walk)
  • Starbucks at West Chapman Avenue (1,553m, 25-min walk)
🌳 Parks & Green Space
  • Memory Lane Park · neighborhood park
    9-minute walk; open green space, playground access, community events
  • Morrison Park · neighborhood park
    9-minute walk; recreational fields, picnic areas
  • Playground (multiple nearby) · playground
    8–9 minute walks; active living amenities for families
🛒 Grocery & Essentials
  • Smart & Final (1,733m, 28-min walk)
  • Puerto Madero (1,811m, 29-min walk)
  • Mother's Market (1,862m, 30-min walk)
🏋 Fitness
  • Esporta Fitness (923m, 15-min walk; full-service gym)

Annual events: City Boulevard seasonal events (shopping, dining promotions) · Memory Lane Park community gatherings · OCTA transit-focused public events and community days

Schools Near Riverglen, Los Angeles

Riverglen's public school situation is challenging. Education access scores just 4/10 (Proximitii), and nearby schools have low proficiency ratings. Santiago Elementary (33/100) and Lampson Elementary (35/100) show significant academic gaps. Most affluent families explore private schools or inter-district magnet/charter options. The OCTA/public school assignment system requires investigation; some buyers pursue private K–12 or lottery-based schools in neighboring Santa Ana.

Elementary Schools

N/A
Santiago Elementary School
K-8 · K–8
SAUSD attendance area (with inter-district transfer options)

Math proficiency 26%, Reading 40%. Significant academic needs. Serves primarily low-income and Latino families.

GreatSchools 2025, Proximitii data

Middle Schools

4.0 /10
Gonzalo Felicitas Mendez Fundamental Intermediate
Middle School · 6–8
SAUSD intermediate school (magnet/choice)

Math 37%, Reading 43%. Fundamental curriculum focuses on traditional academics and discipline. 1,597m away (26-min walk).

Proximitii data

High Schools

N/A
Middle College High School
High School · 9–12
SAUSD early college program (lottery/application-based)

Math 67%, Reading 77%. Best-performing high school option in the area. Partners with community college for dual enrollment. 1,945m (31-min walk), but worth the distance.

GreatSchools 2025

Other Schools

N/A
Riverdale Elementary School
K-6 · K–6
SAUSD attendance area

Math 43%, Reading 41%. Modest improvement over Santiago; still below state averages. 1,210m from Riverglen center.

GreatSchools 2025
3.5 /10
Lampson Elementary School
K-5 · K–5
SAUSD attendance area

Math 32%, Reading 38%. Lower proficiency; serves diverse, mixed-income community. 1,486m away (24-min walk).

GreatSchools 2025

Private Schools Nearby

  • USC College Prep Santa Ana Campus (Charter high school (9–12)) — 2,026m away (32-min walk). Selective admission; strong college-prep curriculum. Popular with families seeking alternatives to traditional public schools.

Source: GreatSchools 2025, Proximitii, SAUSD district data

Commute from Riverglen

Riverglen's primary commute advantage is its OCTA transit access (9/10 Proximitii score). The neighborhood is transit-optimized for commutes within Orange County (Santa Ana, Anaheim, Irvine) and longer commutes north to LA via multi-leg transit or express buses. Car commutes are feasible but the neighborhood's strength is car-optional living.

SFO Airport
🚌 Impractical (3+ hours via multiple transfers) by transit
🚗 6–7 hours via I-405 north by car
Parking: Parking is abundant and free or low-cost on residential streets in Riverglen, though some apartment communities have reserved/assigned parking. Street parking is practical for residential areas; downtown Santa Ana and City Boulevard have paid lots.

Frequently Asked Questions: Riverglen, Los Angeles

Answers to the most common questions homebuyers and realtors ask about Riverglen, Los Angeles, California.

  • The median sale price in Riverglen/Santa Ana area (Los Angeles County) is $905,000 as of February 2026 (Redfin). Prices range $650K–$1.8M depending on property type: condos cluster at $850K–$1.2M, while single-family homes and multi-family investment properties span wider ranges. At this price point, you're buying urban walkability and transit access without the premium pricing of central Los Angeles.
  • Yes—but it depends on your priorities. If you value transit connectivity (9/10 Proximitii score), walkable dining (9/10), and affordable urban living, Riverglen is excellent. If you need strong schools or a suburban feel, it's a poor fit. For professionals working in Orange County or commuting north, or young families without school-age kids, this is a genuinely smart neighborhood. For family homebuyers prioritizing school rankings, look to suburban Orange County areas like Irvine or South OC.
  • Limited fit for families with school-age children. Local schools have low GreatSchools ratings (Santiago Elementary 33/100, Riverdale 42/100). Middle College High (72/100) is the strongest option but requires lottery entry and is 31 minutes walk. Most affluent families pursue private K–12, magnet schools via inter-district transfer, or plan to trade up neighborhoods when kids enter school. Riverglen works well for families with pre-K kids or young professionals planning urban living before school years.
  • Best option: Middle College High School (72/100 GreatSchools, grades 9–12), 31-minute walk. For elementary/middle, Santiago (33/100), Riverdale (42/100), and Lampson (35/100) serve the area but score below state averages. Alternative: USC College Prep Santa Ana Campus (2,026m, charter high school, grades 9–12) with stronger academics. Most families with financial means explore private school (Catholic, Montessori) or inter-district magnet programs in neighboring Santa Ana or Irvine.
  • Riverglen scores 6/10 on walkability (Proximitii), meaning somewhat walkable for dining and entertainment but car-dependent for groceries and services. You can walk 6–10 minutes to Pulido's, Juan Pollo, and other casual restaurants; 16-minute walk to City Boulevard entertainment (movies, shopping). But grocery stores require 28–30 minute walks or a car. Transit walkability is excellent (9/10): just 2-minute walk to OCTA Bristol-Riverglen stops.
  • Daily life centers on transit connectivity and casual urban dining. You'll walk to nearby restaurants for casual meals, rely on OCTA for commutes across Orange County or LA, and drive for grocery shopping and major errands. Parks like Memory Lane Park and Morrison Park provide outdoor space within 9-minute walks. It's practical, transit-oriented urban living—not trendy or culturally distinctive, but genuinely walkable and car-optional if your job is transit-accessible.
  • Housing stock is mixed: ~50% multi-family rental buildings (6–24 units, investment-grade), ~35% condos/townhomes (1,100–1,800 sqft, $650K–$1.4M), and ~15% single-family homes (1,200–1,800 sqft, $850K–$1.8M). Most inventory is designed for renters or urban-focused buyers; traditional suburban family homes are rare. HOA fees on condos run $250–400/month. Older construction is common; newer buildings are exception.
  • Santa Ana overall (Riverglen's city) has mixed crime statistics—some areas are safe, others less so. Sheriff's Dept (748m) and Orange Fire Station 6 (980m) are proximate. Speak with neighbors and check recent crime maps before committing. Transit-oriented neighborhoods often have higher property crime (theft from cars, bike theft) due to density and visitor traffic. It's a real consideration for families; not a major red flag but due diligence is essential.

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Data sources: Redfin, Zillow, California Association of Realtors, US Census ACS 2023, GreatSchools, Walk Score, OpenStreetMap. Content generated 2026. Always verify current market data with a licensed real estate professional.